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Employee theft was missed.
by TheCurseofLono
+1 Reply
One key thing was missed in this article. Keeping workers happy keeps them from being disgruntled and stealing from their employer. I doubt there is a shortage of Wal-Mart workers who feel they are "getting screwed" by their employer. I think the opposite is true of Cost-co. I believe I saw some figures a while back which indicated that Wal-mart suffers from employee theft on a much greater scale than Cost-co. All this stolen product must have an effect on the bottom line.
Re: Employee theft was missed.
by Madai

you raise an intriging point, which begs the question: How much money does walmart lose when people steal?

Is getting $40 dollars of merchandise stolen cheaper than paying someone $40 extra? I have a suspicion that:

1. Employees steal less than $40 of merchanise/week

2. Paying employees $1/hour (40/week) more would be more expensive than getting $40 stolen

3. It would take more than $1/hour to get people to stop stealing.

Yes, but it isn't just employees that steal.
by Tundrayeti

If I worked for Wal-Mart, and they determined my time was worth only ~7.00/hour, then I wouldn't work very hard... That goes for all jobs.

Specifically, I wouldn't worry about proper inventory control.

I'm sure that if a Wal-Mart worker sees someone stuffing CD's down his pants or into her purse, they would say something... But there just isn't very much interest in making eye-contact with the employees and paying attention to the goings-on in the store.

I don't shop there much, and I can afford what I need and am content enough to know the difference between a need and a want (ie. I don't steal)... but it is sometimes shocking how easy it would be to deplete their inventory if someone had half a mind to... The employees there just don't pay enough attention to notice.

Re: Yes, but it isn't just employees that steal.
by Madai

My impression is that most merchandise has security devices, and most stealing nowdays can only be pulled off by employees.

Re: Yes, but it isn't just employees that steal.
by jalaroc
Don't be so sure. When I was in Nevada, a coworker had a cousin that worked at a Walmart in Vegas who was part of a ring of store employees that were stealing gift cards or something and selling them. They were very very successful. I've also bought a DVD from walmart once and opened it up to find it empty. Employee theft for Walmart is a real problem, I think, it's not just people stealing things, it's the expense involved in making sure that people don't steal things. Ah. an article states that in 2007, Walmart losses from employee theft were $3 billion dollars on sales of $349 Billion, this is lower than industry average but it is rising.
Re: Yes, but it isn't just employees that steal.
by Slawrence5

Madai wrote: "My impression is that most merchandise has security devices, and most stealing nowdays can only be pulled off by employees."

Its been this way for a long time. Any journalist who writes an article about "inventory shrinkage" and shoplifting is a lazy type with no analytical skills.

Re: Yes, but it isn't just employees that steal.
by Slawrence5

jalaroc wrote: "An article states that in 2007, Walmart losses from employee theft were $3 billion dollars on sales of $349 Billion, this is lower than industry average but it is rising."

It helps to have few products in your inventory, worth stealing . Also, this is an indication of how fast the turn aroung time is on the sales Walmart makes. They hold little in inventory to be stolen and sell it quickly.

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